In politics, authority (Latin auctoritas, used in Roman law as opposed to potestas and imperium) is often used interchangeably with the term "power". However, their meanings differ. "Power" refers to the ability to achieve certain ends, 'authority' refers to the legitimacy, justification and right to exercise that power. For example whilst a mob has the power to punish a criminal, such as through lynching, only the courts have the authority to order capital punishment.
The audience or group that lives under authority carries the risk of overshadowing the beauty, magnificence, and might of the author by their behaviour in response to the author's lead. Recognizing that there are certain consequences to actions that are controlled by the one in authority with regards to divinity means a recognition of the expalnation that highly practical, effective, and imaginative events in our lives might be the result or reaction of our interaction with divinity. The thought that a successful harvest or a terrible storm are possibly God's response to man's action is the traditional recognition of divine authority. Finding out what the author wants and means for his characters/creation becomes imperative when a thorough understanding of the the godpower's presence and vigor is developed. The western tradition of believing that our God communicates to us is helpful. God does speak to us in reliable ways.
For example, in Christian tradition, the act of observing the communion comes from a combination of divine utterance, scripture, emulation, and inference. Jesus directly states to his disciples that they are to partake of the commemorative rite (found in the gospels and rehearsed in the First Epistle to the Corinthians); there is an example of an apostle and others participating in this act of worship and obedience in the book of Acts, where the date for the observance is mentioned; as with all Bible references, the reader must infer or understand the direction from God to be applicable to today, and in the case of the regularity of the communion, a weekly occurrence of the first day makes necessary a weekly adherence to the blessing of communion.
The word authority derives from the Latin word "auctoritas", used in Roman law as opposed to potestas. According to Giorgio Agamben (2005), "auctoritas has nothing to do with magistrates or the people's potestas or imperium. The Senator… is not a magistrate".
In Weberian sociology, authority comprises a particular type of power. The dominant usage comes from functionalism, defining authority as power which is recognised as legitimate and justified by both the powerful and the powerless. Weber divided authority into three types:
Obedience to authority seems thoroughly ingrained in most of the population: the Milgram experiment showed that over 60% of a sample of Americans demonstrated willingness to severely torture another person when given orders from an appropriate authority figure. This experiment produced similar results when replicated in several other cultures. A similar effect was found in the Stanford prison experiment.
The Restoration (1814) marked a return to traditional authority but now with elements of the legal-rational as well, at least until the ascent of Charles X. His attempt to restore a more absolute monarchy brought on the July Revolution, which formally restored this balance of legal-rational and traditional in the form of a constitutional monarchy. The Revolution of 1848 passed rapidly into a legal-rational mode, falling ultimately to the Second Empire, which saw a blend of all three modes: the government Napoleon III retained a constitution of sorts and, in his person, he combined the Napoleonic charismatic claims with what was now a certain element of tradition, a Bonapartist dynasty to rival the Bourbons.
The complex pattern can be continued practically down to the present day, with a steadily diminishing role for traditional authority, except insofar as republicanism itself has become a tradition. In the 20th century, France had at least two charismatic leaders, Philippe Pétain and Charles de Gaulle. The constitution of the Fifth Republic, overtly a legal-rational system, was tailored specifically for the purpose of creating a presidency powerful enough that the charismatic leader de Gaulle would consent to accept it.
The Supreme Court relies on the executive branch of the government to implement and abide by its decisions; historically, the executive branch has not always done so. For example, in Worcester vs. Georgia, the Supreme Court said the Georgians should respect the autonomy of the Cherokee nation and release the wrongly imprisoned Worcester. Also, it deemed that the laws of Georgia had no jurisdiction in dealing with the Cherokee (at the time a dependent domestic nation) as the latter had a treaty with the federal government, not with Georgia.
At the time, many Georgians were burning Cherokee homes and attacking Cherokee citizens. President Andrew Jackson, who opposed the decision, refused to be the Court's "sword bearer" and told the Court to "enforce the decision yourselves". Not only did he fail to enforce the Court's decision: he sent the Army to Georgia where they imposed the forced removal of the Cherokee Nation to Oklahoma, which came to be known as the "Trail of Tears"; about one third of the Cherokee died on the grueling journey.
Social ethics | Social psychology | Political philosophy | Philosophical terminology | Philosophical concepts
سلطة | Autoritat | Autoritet | Autorität | Autoridad | Autorité | סמכות | 権威 | Autoritet | Autoritet | Autoridade | Авторитарность | Authority | Власт | Auktoriteetti | Auktoritet | อำนาจหน้าที่
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Authority".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world